Orange Partners With OpenAI and Meta to Expand AI Models for African Regional Languages

Transforming Digital Inclusion with AI Models for Local African Languages. Initial focus on Wolof and Pulaar, spoken by over 22 million people in West Africa.

Highlights

  • Orange to collaborate with OpenAI and Meta to develop AI models for African languages.
  • Fine-tuning OpenAI’s Whisper and Meta’s Llama 3.1 models.
  • Open-source AI models to support non-commercial uses like education and health.

Follow Us

Orange Partners With OpenAI and Meta to Expand AI Models for African Regional Languages
French telecommunications company Orange, serving 292 million customers worldwide as of September 30, 2024, announced on November 26 its partnership with OpenAI and Meta to fine-tune AI large language models (LLMs) for understanding African regional languages that are currently unsupported by any generative AI model. Orange aims to expand open-source AI models to include African regional languages for the first time, promoting digital inclusion.

Also Read: Orange Business Launches GenAI Solution to Simplify AI Adoption for Businesses




Fine-Tuning OpenAI and Meta AI Models

Orange plans to fine-tune OpenAI's open-source speech models and Meta's openly available Llama 3.1 model to support regional African languages. This project aims to develop custom AI models that enable customers to communicate naturally in their local languages with Orange for customer support and sales.

These AI models will also be made available under a free license for non-commercial uses, such as public health, education, and other community services, Orange confirmed.

Also Read: Nvidia Unveils New AI Model Fugatto That Generates Audio from Text and Audio

African Language Recognition project

Orange intends to help drive AI innovation in these regional languages including by collaborating on these new AI models with local startups and other technology companies, and by doing so, to mitigate the growing digital divide faced by people all across the African continent.

The project is set to launch in the first half of 2025, with an initial focus on Wolof and Pulaar, spoken by approximately 16 million and six million people, respectively, in West Africa. Orange said its long-term goal is to collaborate with AI providers to develop models that recognise all African languages spoken and written across its 18-country footprint in the region.

Also Read: Deutsche Telekom Turns Anonymised Network Data into Music with AI

Orange's AI Vision

"By fine-tuning leading AI models such as OpenAI's 'Whisper' speech model and Meta's 'Llama' text model with diverse examples of these languages, we will enable them to better understand these regional languages. Orange's vision is to make AI and other related advances accessible to all, including illiterate populations, who are currently unable to benefit from the potential of artificial intelligence. The initiative is a blueprint for how AI can be used to benefit those currently excluded," Orange said.

Orange and OpenAI Sign an Agreement

In addition to this regional African language recognition project, OpenAI and Orange have signed an agreement that will provide Orange with direct access to OpenAI's models, available for the first time in Europe with data processing and hosting in European data centres, enabling Orange to work on improving existing solutions across its footprint.

Furthermore, Orange said this new partnership will also facilitate early access to OpenAI's latest and most advanced AI models, enabling the realisation of other key use cases such as AI-based voice interactions with Orange customers.

Also Read: Telefonica’s Wayra Invests in AI Startup Perplexity, Signs Commercial Agreement

Committed to Responsible AI

Orange reiterated its commitment to 'Responsible AI,' where the company carefully chooses the most appropriate and simplest solution for each AI use case. Orange concluded by saying it is committed to playing a key role in the development of Responsible AI in Africa as well as promoting open-source AI in Europe.

Reported By

Telecom Analyst

Passionately following the Indian #Telecom Industry for over a decade from Business, Consumer and a Technical perspective. My primary focus area is Consumer & Digital Experience.

Recent Comments

TheAndroidFreak :

It will never penetrate in future as well as 6G frequency will be higher as we need higher bandwidth. 1400Mhz…

First 6G Deployments Are Expected in 2030: Ericsson Mobility Report

Shivraj Roy :

um no no i meant how 3500mhz doesnt penetrate through walls and such

First 6G Deployments Are Expected in 2030: Ericsson Mobility Report

rahul_yadav :

That not gonna happed instead Government should mandate all new phone (Smartphone & Keypad phone) should come with 4G Network…

Jio, Airtel, and Vodafone Idea See Subscriber Losses, While BSNL…

TheAndroidFreak :

Target is mid May for 1L sites. I don't have any doubt that it won't be covered. I am keeping…

Jio, Airtel, and Vodafone Idea See Subscriber Losses, While BSNL…

TheAndroidFreak :

2G should be shut down immediately by all three operators. BSNL should fast track LTE on 700Mhz and 900Mhz bands…

Jio, Airtel, and Vodafone Idea See Subscriber Losses, While BSNL…

Load More
Subscribe
Notify of
0 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments